When the door was finally closed upon
the brothers and their faithful thrall, Alfred did
not give way to despair. The words of Ragnar,
“If there be a God, let Him deliver you,”
had sunk deeply into his heart, and had produced precisely
the opposite effect to that which his cousin had intended;
it seemed as if his cause were thus committed to the
great Being in Whose Hand was the disposal of all
things; as if His Honour were at stake, Whom the murderer
had so impiously defied.
“‘If there be a God, let
Him deliver you,’” repeated Alfred, and
it seemed to him as if a Voice replied, “Is
My Arm shortened, that It cannot save?”
But how salvation was to come, and
even in what mode danger was to be expected, was unknown
to them; nay, was even unguessed. They heard the
bustle below, which followed Ragnar’s announcement
of his intended departure from Aescendune. They
heard the mustering of the horses-and at
last the conviction forced itself upon them that the
foe were about to evacuate the hall. But in that
case, how would he inflict his sentence upon his victims?
The dread truth, the suspicion of
his real intention, crept upon the minds of both Alfred
and Oswy. Elfric yet lay insensible, or seemingly
so, upon the bed, lost to all perception of his danger.
Alfred sat at the head of the bed, looking with brotherly
love at the prostrate form of him for whom he was
giving his life; but feeling secretly grateful that
there was no painful struggle imminent in his case;
that death itself would come unperceived, without
torturing forebodings.
It was at this moment that Oswy, who
stood by the window, which was strongly barred, but
which he had opened, for the night was oppressively
warm, caught the faint and distant sound of a mighty
host advancing through the forest; at first it was
very faint, and he only heard it through the pauses
in the storm of sound which attended Ragnar’s
preparations for departure, but it soon became more
distinct, and he turned to Alfred.
“Listen, my lord, they come
to our aid; listen, I hear the army of Edgar.”
Alfred rushed to the window, the hope
of life strong within him; at first he could hear
nothing for the noise below, but at length there was
a lull in the confusion, and then he heard distinctly
the sound of the coming deliverers. Another minute,
and he saw the dark lines leaving the shadow of the
forest, and descending the hill in serried array, then
deploying, as if to surround a foe in stealthy silence;
he looked around for the object, and beheld Ragnar’s
forces all unconscious of their danger, not having
heard the approach in their own hasty preparations
for departure. Another moment of dread suspense,
like that with which the gazer watches the dark thundercloud
before the lightning’s flash. A moment
of dread silence-during which some orders,
given loudly below, forced themselves upon him:
“Fire the castle, every portion
of it; fire the stables, the barns, the outbuildings;
we will leave a pile of blackened ruins for Edgar when
he comes; the halls where the princely Edwy has feasted
shall never be his, or entertain him as guest.”
Meanwhile, the dark forces, unseen
by the destroyers, were still surrounding the castle,
deploying on all sides to surround it as in a net;
for they saw the intention of their victims, and meant
to cut off all chance of escape.
But the position of the brothers seemed
as perilous as ever-for how could Edgar’s
troops rescue them if the place were once on fire?
Alfred gazed with pallid face upon Oswy, but met only
a resigned helpless glance in return.
Yet, even at this moment of awful
suspense, a voice seemed to whisper in his ear, “Stand
still, and see the salvation of God.”
“Oswy,” he exclaimed,
“we shall not die-I feel sure that
God will save us!”
“It must be soon then,”
replied Oswy; “soon, my lord, for they have
already set the place on fire, just beneath us; can
you not smell the smoke?”
Just at that moment came the war cry
of the Mercians, and the charge we have already described.
It was during the following few minutes,
while Ragnar and all his men were vainly striving
to extinguish the conflagration they had raised-
for the dry timber of which the hall was chiefly built
had taken fire like matchwood-it was while
the friends without were preparing to attack, that
a sudden change came over the patient.
“Alfred, my brother!”
Alfred looked round in surprise; consciousness
had returned, and the face was calm and possessed
as his own.
“Elfric, my dear Elfric!”
“What does all this mean? How came I here?
What makes this smoke?”
“We are in danger, great danger;
prisoners in our own house, which they have set on
fire.”
“I remember now-is not this our dear
father’s room?”
“Yes; we are prisoners in it, they have barred
the door upon us.”
“But they cannot bar us in:
there is another door, Alfred; one my father once
pointed out to me, but told me to keep its existence
a secret, as it always had been kept. Who are
without?”
“The Mercians, Edgar’s
army, come to deliver us; if we can reach them, we
are safe.”
“I thought they were our foes,
but all seems strange now. Alfred, lift up the
tapestry which conceals the recess where dear father’s
armour hung.”
Alfred complied.
“Now, just where the breastplate
hung you will find a round knob of wood like a peg.”
“Yes, it is here.”
“Push it hard-no, harder.”
Alfred did so, and a concealed door
flew open; he stepped through it with a cry of joy,
and found himself on the staircase leading up from
the postern gate by which he had entered, just below
the closed door which led into the gallery above.
“God be thanked! we are saved-saved.
Elfric!
“Oswy, take him in your arms,
quick! quick! I lead the way, and will get the
boat ready-door open and boat ready.”
It was all the work of a moment; they
were on the private staircase, carrying Elfric, carefully
wrapt up. The smoke had entered even here; the
next moment they were at the entrance. Happily
the whole attention of Ragnar was concentrated on
self preservation.
One more minute, and Elfric was placed
in the coracle. The Mercians on the further bank
now observed them, and at first, not knowing them,
seemed disposed to treat them as foes; when Oswy cried
aloud, “Spare your arrows; it is Elfric of Aescendune;”
and they crowded to the bank joyfully, for the purpose
of the attack was known to all, and now they saw its
object placed beyond the reach of further risk of failure.
The coracle touched the further bank;
a dozen willing hands assisted them up the slope.
And amidst shouts of vociferous joy and triumph they
were conducted to King Edgar, who hastened towards
the scene with Siward.
“Now, let the castle burn, let it burn,”
said Oswy.
“Alfred, is it you?” exclaimed
the young king; “just escaped from the flames!
How came you there? and this is Elfric; you have saved
him.”
“God has delivered us.”
“But you have been the instrument;
you must tell me all another time, get him into shelter
quickly.
“Here, men, bear him to the
priory, while we stay to do our duty here.
“Alfred, you must not linger.”
“One favour, my lord and king;
show mercy to Ragnar, to Redwald, you know not how
sad his story has been.”
“Leave that to me; he shall
have all he deserves;” and Alfred was forced
to be content.
At this moment, aroused by the shouts
of joy, Ragnar, forgetting even his danger, rushed
to the roof. There he saw a crowd surrounding
some object of their joy; in the darkness of the night
he could not distinguish more, but the cry, “Long
live Alfred of Aescendune!” arose spontaneously
from the crowd, just as the brothers departed.
Faint with toil as he was, his heart beating wildly
with apprehension, he rushed to the chamber through
smoke and flame, for the tongues of fire were already
licking the staircase. He withdrew the bars, he
rushed in, the room was empty.
“It is magic, sorcery, witchcraft,” he
groaned.
But the remembrance of his last words,
of his scornful defiance of God, came back to him,
and with it a conviction that he had indeed lifted
up his arm against the Holy One. He felt a sickening
feeling of horror and despair rush upon him, when
loud cries calling him from beneath aroused him.
“We must charge through them;
we cannot burn here; we must die fighting sword in
hand, it is all that is left.”
Not one voice spoke of surrender amongst
those fierce warriors, or of seeking mercy.
It was indeed high time, for all efforts
to extinguish the flames had proved vain; every part
of the castle was on fire; the fiery element streamed
from the lower windows, and curled upwards around the
towers; it crackled and hissed in its fury, and the
atmosphere became unfit to breathe; it was like inhaling
flame. Sparks flew about in all directions, dense
stifling smoke filled every room. Not a man remained
in the hall, when Redwald rushed down the gallery,
holding his breath, for the hot air scorched the lungs;
when, just as he arrived, the staircase fell with
a huge crash, and the flames shot up in his face,
igniting hair and beard, and scorching his flesh.
He rushed back to the opposite end of the passage,
only to meet another blast of fire and smoke-for
they had ignited the hall in twenty places at once;
they had done their work all too well. He rushed
to the room he had left, shut the door for a moment’s
respite from flame and smoke, and then, springing
at the window, strove to tear the bars down, but all
in vain.
“There must be some egress.
How did they escape? How could they escape?”
he cried; and he sought in vain for the exit, for they
had closed the door again, and he knew not where to
look; in vain he lifted the tapestry, he could not
discover the secret; and at last, overpowered by the
heat, he sprang again to the window, and drank in deep
draughts of fresh cool air to appease the burning
feeling in his throat.
Crash! crash! part of the roof had
given way, and the whole chamber trembled; then a
single tongue of flame shot up through the floor, then
another; the door had caught outside. Even in
that moment he beheld his men, his faithful followers,
madly seeking death from the swords of the foe; they
had lowered the drawbridge, and dashed out without
a leader.
“Would I were with them!”
he cried. “Oh, to die like this!”
“Behold,” cried a voice
without, “he hath digged and graven a pit, and
is fallen himself into the destruction he made for
others.”
It was Father Swithin, who had observed
the face at the window, and who raised the cry which
now drew all the enemy to gaze upon him, for they
had no longer a foe to destroy.
The flames now filled the room, but
still he clung to the window, and thus protracted
his torments; his foes, even the stern monk, could
but pity him now, so marred and blackened was his
visage, so agonised his linéaments; like, as
they said, the rude pictures of the lost, where the
last judgment was painted on the walls of the churches.
Yet he uttered no cry, he had resolved to die bravely;
all was lost now. Another moment, and those who
watched saw the huge beams which supported the building
bend and quiver; then the whole framework collapsed,
and with a sound like thunder the roof tumbled in,
and the unhappy Ragnar was buried in the ruin; while
the flames from his funeral pyre rose to the very
heavens, and the smoke blotted the stars from view.
“Even so,” said the monk,
solemnly, “let Thine enemies perish, O Lord,
but let them that love Thee be as the sun, when he
goeth forth in his might.”
But those were not wanting who could
not sympathise with the stern sentiment, remembering
better and gentler lessons from the lips of the great
Teacher and Master of souls.
“He has passed into the Hands
of his God, there let us leave him,” said Father
Cuthbert, who had just arrived at the moment.
“It is not for us to judge a soul which has
passed to the judgment seat, and is beyond the sentence
of men.”
Meanwhile, they had borne Elfric first
to the priory, for they judged it not well that he
should yet be brought to his mother; they feared the
sudden shock. Many of the good monks had studied
medicine, for they were in fact the healers both of
soul and body throughout the district, and they attended
him with assiduous care. They put him to bed,
they gave him cordials which soon produced quiet
sleep, and watched by him for many hours.
It was not till the day had far advanced
that he awoke, greatly refreshed, and saw Father Cuthbert
and Alfred standing by him. They had allayed
the fever, bound up the wound, which was not in itself
dangerous, and he looked more like himself than one
could have imagined possible.
And now they thought they might venture
to summon the lady Edith; and Alfred broke the intelligence
to her, for she knew not the events of the night.
“Mother,” he said; “we
have news of Elfric, both bad and good, to tell you.”
“He lives then,” she said; “he lives!”
“Yes, lives, and is near; but he was wounded
badly in the battle.”
“I must go to him,” she
said, and arose, forgetting all possible obstacles
in a mother’s love.
“He is near at hand, in the
priory; you will find him much changed, but they say
he will do well.”
She shook like an aspen leaf, and
threw her garments around her with nervous earnestness.
“Come, mother, take my arm.”
“O Alfred, may I not come, too?” said
little Edgitha.
“Yes, you may come too;” and they left
the house.
Elfric heard them approach, and sat
up in his bed, Father Cuthbert supporting him with
his arm; while another visitor, Edgar himself, stood
at the head of the bed, but retired to give place to
the mother, as if he felt no stranger could then intrude,
when the widow clasped her prodigal to her loving
breast.